A Four-Nation Corridor: Dawei's Special Economic Zone

An obscure fishing community longtime hidden from world view is now playing host to the single largest infrastructure project in Southeast Asia.

Some 196 square kilometers along Myanmar’s west coast is slated for transformation into a deep sea port and industrial estate unrivaled anywhere else in the region.

The nearest town, Dawei, from which the project draws its name, was previously a stronghold for the Karen National Union (KNU), during what was one of the world’s longest-running ethnic insurgencies. But a ceasefire and landmine clearing in the wake of Myanmar’s dawning democracy and market economy has enticed neighboring Thai investors.

In 2008 one of Thailand’s leading infrastructure construction companies, Italian-Thai Development (ITD), launched plans for Dawei’s transformation. With cooperation from the Myanmar government, the Dawei Special Economic Zone (DSEZ) was announced. The project would span an area nearly the size of Vietnam’s capital Hanoi, and require up to US$ 58 billion in investment. Its sea port would accommodate 25 vessels ranging from 20,000 to 50,000 tons and handle 280 million tons of goods per year. The industrial zone would include heavy, medium and light industry, upstream and downstream petrochemical complexes and a steel mill. Coal-fired power plants with a total capacity of 4,000 MW and a 214 MW hydroelectric dam and water storage reservoir would be built, along with accompanying residential, recreation and commercial zones. Most importantly, the project would also include a 160 km highway and rail link east into Thailand with oil and gas pipelines and electrical transmission lines along the same right-of-way.

The government of Thailand stepped in and negotiated a new agreement with Myanmar in late 2013. A 75- year concession rights for DSEZ development were transferred to a new company, structured as a “Special Purpose Vehicle” (SPV) jointly owned (50:50) by the governments of Myanmar and Thailand. However, little progress was made by the time the Thai military staged a coup in May 2014.

While the Dawei project was stalled, increasing documentation emerged regarding social and environmental impacts incurred as a result of site preparation and preliminary road construction.

In 2014 it was estimated 20-36 villages, (comprising approximately 4,384 – 7,807 households or 22,000 – 43,000 people), would be directly affected by the construction of the DSEZ and related infrastructure. Contrary to the Thai government’s claim that resettlement has been done with World Bank’s standards, ground surveys between 2013 and 2014 stated “critical flaws” in land confiscation, resettlement and compensation process. Affected communities were given limited information about DSEZ and their ultimate displacement. Of 20 villages surveyed only 15 percent of all households reported having received compensation. And for them the amounts received have mostly been inadequate to sustain their family’s future. Resettlement arrangements have also been reportedly inadequate and the living standards of those resettled have been considered lowered, leaving many to Local Concerns

Thailand’s leading environmental economics think tank, the Healthy Public Policy Foundation, is concerned about the reported social impacts could be much broader. The group’s 2012 report urged both Thai and Myanmar governments to undertake a comprehensive cumulative environment, social and health impacts assessment of the project. They cited the tremendous unintended impacts that resulted from Thailand’s Eastern Seaboard project, which when launched nearly four decades ago, was dubbed the “dawn of Thailand’s development era”. Its Map Ta Phut Industrial Estate has become world renowned for its airborne chemical pollution, soil contamination and extensive health impacts to surrounding communities. Increased civil society pressure at Map Ta Phut and elsewhere in Thailand has been cited as a motivator for shifting industrial development to Dawei.

Additionally, plans for the road and rail link between Dawei, Bangkok and the Eastern Seaboard project will affect many communities within the transport corridor. Furthermore, concerns are now being raised regarding the cumulative impacts of the expansion of this corridor further east, across Cambodia to Vietnam’s picturesque seaside city of Quy Nhon.

In 1998 the Asian Development Bank first identified the potential for a GMS economic corridor from Dawei to Quy Nhon. But the bank’s involvement in such an initiative could not move forward since the ADB was prohibited from engaging bilaterally with Myanmar during its three decades of military rule. Earlier this year, however, the ADB has expressed interest to become involved in Dawei should Japan follow through with its intention to invest in the DSEZ.

Realization of this 2,200 km-long GMS Southern Economic Corridor received a sizable boost in 2014 when Vietnam announced that its coastal city of Quy Nhon would house the largest refinery and petrochemical complex in the region. It would be developed and operated by PTT Plc, Thailand’s top energy company, and Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest oil producer. Known in Vietnam as the Victory Project, the US$22 billion refinery is designed to refine 20 million tons of crude oil annually – 400,000 barrels per day. PTT plans to begin construction in 2016 and start operations in 2021. This project has drawn interests from Thai and Singaporean investors to set up industrial estates nearby. Expansion of Quy Nhon’s airport, deep sea port and highway linking central Vietnam to neighboring Laos and Cambodia are also underway.

The Binh Dinh provincial authority, charged of overseeing the project told Mekong Eye that they expects future traffic of raw materials and finished products between Quy Nhon and Dawei along the corridor identified by ADB once transport links are completed. A Thai source told MekongEye Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen has expressed interest in attracting investors to develop industries along the Cambodian section of the corridor.

Corridor’s SEA urged

The overall impact of building out Dawei, Quy Nhon with their connecting transport links should be considered in a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA), advises Dr Dejrat Sukamnoed, head of Healthy Public Policy Foundation. In 2012, he undertook an initial desk impact assessment for DSEZ and recommended an SEA, citing Thailand’s experience with Map Ta Put.

He told The Mekong Eye that if Japan and the ADB are to get involved in the DSEZ, particularly given the potential link to Quy Nhon and resulting economic corridor, both entities should ensure an SEA is conducted and cumulative impacts are assessed as such analysis is consistent with the policies of both lenders.